ABSTRACT

]IGovernance in the Asia-Pacific is a student-friendly textbook which examines the governance of nation states in this diverse and rapidly-changing region. It sets out the range of political beliefs and styles that flourish and the similarities and differences between individual states and the ways in which they choose to govern. Wide-ranging in scope and clearly written to help students get to the bottom of important issues, the book addresses many key areas including:
* the Anglo-American powers
* Japan
* independence movements
* the politics of economic development
* social movements
* the politics of the environment
* the pressures for political change in the region.
And these issues are all analysed within the broad context of governance in the Asia-Pacific more generally. The authors also identify factors which explain the political underpinning of the dramatic economic development in the region.

chapter 1|28 pages

Politics and governance in the Asia-Pacific

Historical and thematic overview

part 1|97 pages

State Forms and Political Struggles

chapter 2|21 pages

Red star over East Asia

Communist states and communist parties

chapter 3|29 pages

Politics and governance in Japan

chapter 4|20 pages

Independence

State building in South-East Asia

part 2|124 pages

Policy, Politics and Governance

chapter 6|24 pages

Elite governance

Business, bureaucrats and the military

chapter 7|22 pages

Challenging the political order

Social movements

part 3|52 pages

Riding the Juggernaut

chapter 11|25 pages

Sayonara to the strong state

From government to governance in the Asia-Pacific

chapter 12|26 pages

Pressures for change

Capitalist development and democracy